How did this float job come out?

I just had a floater in to handle various areas in my house, including an office (converted from a garage). I noticed that tape seems to be showing through the mud in areas. No apparent loose edges (except as noted below).

How would you experts rate this job? Are there any apparent issues? Thanks!

Below is a crop of the above image. Here, when I run my fingers along the area where the horizontal float intersects with the corner float, it sounds as though there is no mud under a small area at the corner. You may be able to see a few 'holes' in the mud. Problem? If so, could a good caulk correct it? Recommendations for a good caulk for caulking newly floated sheetrock to an existing textured wall (sand) and existing ceiling (popcorn) appreciated.

How did this float job come out?

Where I am in central fl. this is a very big problem, they come in and do bad mud work and usually get away with it because the texture will hide it. After it's been painted it does't look too bad. Then a couple years down the road when problems do start showing up they are long gone. If I was you I would go around and check every seam and every joint they taped very close. To fix this is a big deal that texture has to be scrapped off, the joints remudded, then retextured. Make sure you also check where the wall meets the ceiling. Keep us posted. FYI these joints should have at least 2 coats of mud 3 is even better.

How did this float job come out?

Thanks for your responses. I had a quality contractor/friend come take a look. Not the best, but definitely not the worst. My biggest relief is that areas where I thought the tape might be an issue aren't. So the project moves forward toward the deadline.

How did this float job come out?

I agree with crisn. I think your friend may be a g/c (general contractor) my suggestion would be to call a drywall contractor and have him look at it and give you a estimate it may surprise you. For someone with the tools and experience this won't be that big a job.

How did this float job come out?

Quote:

Originally Posted by chrisn

Despite what the friend said, you need another coat of mud on the tape

I appreciate the follow-up response, and if it was anyone else, I would have my doubts. But I've known this guy for decades and called him because he is not only the most knowledgeable person I know in all aspects of construction, but also the most anal about doing the job right (and knowing what 'right' is). If he said the tape was fine, believe me, it was beyond doubt fine.

How did this float job come out?

that is not a quality job but it's your house. if you friend thought that was an ok job then his idea of quality and my idea of quality are two different things.

From my OP, it should be obvious that the quality of the job was in question. In fact, 'not the best, not the worst' implies average, give or take.

As far as my friend, I doubt many surpass his standard of quality and integrity. I've not placed my trust in his opinion lightly. That the seams stay put is my primary concern. A coat of First Coat Primer should handle the rest, and even knock down the texture to the light texture I asked for.

I appreciate your response, but the friend gets the final word for the above stated reasons plus one: He was actually in the room.

How did this float job come out?

Quote:

Originally Posted by chrisn

Amendment
Looking at the pic, this is what I would think, maybe it is a bad pic

It's tough to get a fix with a forum image. It's really not a great job, and that's disappointing, as I appreciate quality work. However, as mentioned, the taped seams were my primary concern, and the First Coat Primer (sprayed and rolled by a following helper) should take care of any uneveness.

I should also mention that finding a contractor who really cares about his work is a rare find. I've done 80% of this job myself because of that. Of the few outsiders I've had in (for the permitted trades and what I couldn't handle), I've only been happy with one or two.

Having owned and operated an A/C business for close to 30 years, I've always tried to take integrity in my work and give the customer more than expected. My experience with this reno (first time I've used "outsiders" for anything) has opened my eyes to what people go through when allowing workers into their home. I think that for a large percentage of people, dealing with contractors is a nightmare.

How did this float job come out?

Quote:

Originally Posted by rightit

It's tough to get a fix with a forum image. It's really not a great job, and that's disappointing, as I appreciate quality work. However, as mentioned, the taped seams were my primary concern, and the First Coat Primer (sprayed and rolled by a following helper) should take care of any uneveness.

I should also mention that finding a contractor who really cares about his work is a rare find. I've done 80% of this job myself because of that. Of the few outsiders I've had in (for the permitted trades and what I couldn't handle), I've only been happy with one or two.

Having owned and operated an A/C business for close to 30 years, I've always tried to take integrity in my work and give the customer more than expected. My experience with this reno (first time I've used "outsiders" for anything) has opened my eyes to what people go through when allowing workers into their home. I think that for a large percentage of people, dealing with contractors is a nightmare.

Don't bet on it That primer will help but it is not designed to fill in gaps and such and it is not a very good sealer either. Not that I am questioning you're"contractor" friend but the particular primer is no where near top quality ( in my lowly painters opinion)